The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

OBS. 3.—­Deviations of this kind are, in general, to be considered solecisms; otherwise, the rules of grammar would be of no use or authority. Despauter, an ancient Latin grammarian, gave an improper latitude to this figure, or to a species of it, under the name of Antiptosis; and Behourt and others extended it still further.  But Sanctius says, “Antiptosi grammaticorum nihil imperitius, quod figmentum si esset verum, frustra quaereretur, quem casum verba regerent.”  And the Messieurs De Port Royal reject the figure altogether.  There are, however, some changes of this kind, which the grammarian is not competent to condemn, though they do not accord with the ordinary principles of construction.

V. Hyperbaton is the transposition of words; as, “He wanders earth around.”—­CowperRings the world with the vain stir.”—­Id.  “Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto you.”—­Acts, xvii, 23. “‘Happy’, says Montesquieu, ’is that nation whose annals are tiresome.’”—­Corwin, in Congress, 1847.  This figure is much employed in poetry.  A judicious use of it confers harmony, variety, strength, and vivacity upon composition.  But care should be taken lest it produce ambiguity or obscurity, absurdity or solecism.

OBS.—­A confused and intricate arrangement of words, received from some of the ancients the name of Syn’chysis, and was reckoned by them among the figures of grammar.  By some authors, this has been improperly identified with Hyper’baton, or elegant inversion; as may be seen under the word Synchysis in Littleton’s Dictionary, or in Holmes’s Rhetoric, at page 58th. Synchysis literally means confusion, or commixtion; and, in grammar, is significant only of some poetical jumble of words, some verbal kink or snarl, which cannot be grammatically resolved or disentangled:  as,

   “Is piety thus and pure devotion paid?”
        —­Milton, P. L., B. xi, l. 452.

   “An ass will with his long ears fray
    The flies that tickle him away;
    But man delights to have his ears
    Blown maggots in by
flatterers.”
        —­Butler’s Poems, p. 161.

SECTION IV.—­FIGURES OF RHETORIC.

A Figure of Rhetoric is an intentional deviation from the ordinary application of words.  Several of this kind of figures are commonly called Tropes, i.e., turns; because certain words are turned from their original signification to an other.[481]

Numerous departures from perfect simplicity of diction, occur in almost every kind of composition.  They are mostly founded on some similitude or relation of things, which, by the power of imagination, is rendered conducive to ornament or illustration.

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